Thursday, July 31, 2025

A 'Blitz excursion to Sweden' - Part 3: The Swedish Naval Museum

The Swedish Naval Museum in Karlskrona

Today's destination is located on the Swedish south east cost in the fortified town of Karlskrona, where the Swedish Naval Museum is located. This is a place I've been wanting to visit for a long time, so my expectations were pretty high:

The Swedish Naval Museum in Karlskrona
They have 3 ships on display outside:
The Swedish Naval Museum in Karlskrona
This was the Swedish Navy's main wharf, and the area and town is heavily fortified:
The Swedish Naval Museum in Karlskrona
When entering the museum, the presentation is neat, modern and educational:
The Swedish Naval Museum in Karlskrona
They show the importance of models in early ship designs and construction:
The Swedish Naval Museum in Karlskrona
Some of those models are really large:
The Swedish Naval Museum in Karlskrona
The number of models are mostly limited to older sailing ships though. Perhaps because Sweden's naval battles are mostly limited to this period. 

On the other hand they have a very educational approach to Naval warfare with sailing ships; like the ship guns had a very limited range of about 300 yards and were very inaccurate due to roll, pitch and heave and took long time to reload. Therefore 'melee' and boarding of enemy ships were an important tactic. These factors gives a lot of ideas for a naval wargame. I haven't tried that before. Maybe I should?

The diorama of the 'Battle of Svensksund' between Sweden and Russia in 1790 shows how chaotic such battle could be. Swedish victory:
The Swedish Naval Museum in Karlskrona
The Swedish Naval Museum in Karlskrona
A 1:1 scale display from a gun-deck. Mirrors made a impression how it looked with several guns:
The Swedish Naval Museum in Karlskrona
The museum also had a 'gun simulator' where you could 'fire a volley' against Danish (!) ships to see how to aim on moving targets when your muzzle velocity and range is bad:
The Swedish Naval Museum in Karlskrona
The hall of 'Figureheads' from those sailing ships were impressive:
The Swedish Naval Museum in Karlskrona
A small section of 'from sail to steam':
The Swedish Naval Museum in Karlskrona
The 'Cold War' period was mostly displayed by interactive screens and boards and had just a very few models. 

This is probably the very first model of a submarine from the 18th century. It's made by a Swede:
The Swedish Naval Museum in Karlskrona
Sweden's first submarine from 1905 is preserved on the museum. It's based on a periodic American design:
The Swedish Naval Museum in Karlskrona
And Neptune from 1978:
The Swedish Naval Museum in Karlskrona
The museum didn't mention any naval fleet arm, but showed a model of the Heinkel. A similar model is actually exhibited on the Norwegian Naval Museum as Norway had a 'fleet arm'. Perhaps I should make a blogpost from there too as well?
The Swedish Naval Museum in Karlskrona
This is an overview of the museum shop. No model kits or Cobi kits (which have gained popularity in military museums lately). Just mainstream maritime products 'your wife could have picked':
The Swedish Naval Museum in Karlskrona
Well, except for these 3 models. But the 'cheapest' costed hundreds of £, while the other two costed over thousand (!)
The Swedish Naval Museum in Karlskrona
-And their  Café I never had time to visit, as it closed one hour before the museum. Right after they closed the Café, the staff started to close those 3 open ships in photo no. 2 in this post. So a lot was closed before the museum actually closed. 

As initially stated my expectations were high, so I was actually a little bit disappointed by this visit. -But I learnt new things about sailing-age warfare though, and knowledgeis why we seeks museums, isn't it? If 18th and 19th Century Swedish Navy's is your thing, this is the place to go. 

I'm some 570km away from home now, and I'll better start planning my return. I've been taking reservations due to the weather throughout the whole trip as the forcast have been changing every day and hour. But I've been lucky; no rain so far. So if the weather permits, there will be 'pit stops' on the return.  Please stay tuned.

Perhaps I should visit the Norwegian Naval Museum when coming back?

6 comments:

  1. Ser fristende ut å følge i dine fotspor neste sommer

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    1. Takk for dine vennlige ord. Jeg håper jeg har gitt nok informasjon i mine bloggposter til at du kan planlegge engine tur.

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  2. Shame about the early closing. Great photos, l particularly liked the 18th century submarine model ,fascinating .
    Alan Tradgardland

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    1. Thank you Alan for reading and commenting. Sweden has been pioners and a leading nation in submarine design and technology, which is another thing I learned at the museum (instead of sitting at the Café and drinking coffee).

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  3. Some lovely models Roger. Thanks for sharing your pictures of the Marin Museum

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    Replies
    1. It's a pleasure to share things that readers here might find interesting. Thank you for reading and commenting.

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